Editor’s note: Electronics recycling will be featured in sessions at the 2026 E-scrap Conference in New Orleans October 26-28.
Basel Action Network has added Recycle Global Exchange to its e-Stewards Enterprise Program, a move that reflects continued industry interest in marketplace-based approaches to enterprise IT asset disposition and downstream vendor management.
Under the partnership, RGX said it will promote and use e-Stewards-certified processors within its platform for electronics disposition services. The companies described the arrangement as a way to improve visibility and consistency in how enterprise hardware is routed at end of life.
The development is notable for the ITAD sector because it highlights ongoing experimentation with intermediary platforms and marketplace-style models in enterprise disposition workflows. While the long-term role of these platforms is still unclear, some companies are exploring whether exchanges and procurement-style systems can help manage multi-site hardware disposition, vendor selection and recovery value optimization alongside traditional enterprise-to-ITAD relationships.
RGX said its platform is designed to help enterprises manage asset disposition across multiple locations while comparing service providers and downstream options. The company also stated that its customer base includes Fortune 100 firms, healthcare systems, telecom operators and retailers.
For e-Stewards, the partnership also reinforces continued emphasis on certified downstream controls at a time when enterprise customers face increasing scrutiny around ESG reporting, data security and export compliance. The certification program requires participating processors to meet standards tied to export controls, downstream accountability, auditing and materials management practices.
The announcement may also point to broader questions about how enterprise disposition programs will evolve. If marketplace operators gain traction, they could play a larger role in connecting enterprises with ITAD vendors and downstream processors. One possible outcome is a hybrid model in which enterprises and ITAD providers use marketplace-style platforms to manage multi-site projects or optimize recovery value while maintaining direct strategic relationships for core ITAD services. It remains unclear how widely these models will be adopted across the sector.
The partnership does not appear to involve exclusivity requirements, and no transaction volumes or financial terms were disclosed. The announcement reflects increasing interaction among certification bodies, disposition platforms and enterprise procurement functions across the electronics recovery chain.






















